Literally This Weekhttp://pub93465.podomatic.com
A weekly podcast sharing news from the publishing industry, libraries, and the New York Times bestseller lists. If it's happening in the world of books, we'll tell you about it.en-uspodOmatic RSS GeneratorMon, 11 Dec 2017 22:18:04 +0000weekly,news,books,publishing,libraries,reading,writing,tips,Arts,Literature,Washington DCLet's get literaryaois21 publishingoutreach@aois21.comcleannoaois21 publishingA weekly podcast sharing news from the publishing industry, libraries, and the New York Times bestseller lists. If it's happening in the world of books, we'll tell you about it.December 9, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_12324238.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: a Canadian author faced trouble from U.S. Customs, Australia is studying the effect of Google and Facebook on the media, The Street is laying off staff again, the Goodreads Choice Award winners were announced, the LA Weekly has new owners, libraries in Egypt are under threat, and a lawsuit is attempting to stop a mashup between "Star Trek" and Dr. Seuss. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers, the Amazon Charts, and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is brought to you by "Whiskey Sharp: Unraveled" by New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Lauren Dane. Coming this January and available to preorder today on Amazon.
It is also sponsored by the Indiegogo campaign to bring Michael B. Judkins poetry to the stage. Visit Indiegogo.com/at/judkins/x to pledge your support and help fulfill Michael’s vision.
It is also brought to you by our annual #GiveABook campaign. This year we are encouraging you to get out and visit your local independent bookstore to find a book for the ones you love. We’ll be at Walls of Books in Washington, DC, for a series of events that celebrate the power of the story and encourage reading and sharing with all. Find out more at events.aois21.com and www.wallsofbooksdc.com.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and audio.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-12-10T18_21_49-08_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-12-10T18_21_49-08_00Mon, 11 Dec 2017 02:21:49 +00002017-12-112017-12-11https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-12-10T18_21_49-08_00
aois21 publishing1561noThis week: a Canadian author faced trouble from U.S. Customs, Australia is studying the effect of Google and Facebook on the media, The Street is laying off staff again, the Goodreads Choice Award winners were announced, the LA Weekly has new owners, libraries in Egypt are under threat, and a lawsuit is attempting to stop a mashup between "Star Trek" and Dr. Seuss. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers, the Amazon Charts, and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is brought to you by "Whiskey Sharp: Unraveled" by New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Lauren Dane. Coming this January and available to preorder today on Amazon.
It is also sponsored by the Indiegogo campaign to bring Michael B. Judkins poetry to the stage. Visit Indiegogo.com/at/judkins/x to pledge your support and help fulfill Michael’s vision.
It is also brought to you by our annual #GiveABook campaign. This year we are encouraging you to get out and visit your local independent bookstore to find a book for the ones you love. We’ll be at Walls of Books in Washington, DC, for a series of events that celebrate the power of the story and encourage reading and sharing with all. Find out more at events.aois21.com and www.wallsofbooksdc.com.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and audio.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: a Canadian author faced trouble from U.S. Customs, Australia is studying the effect of...December 2, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_12324238.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: one copyright lawsuit begot another concerning a popular parody card series, 2017 has been a weird year for bestsellers, Amazon is clashing with publishers, Dictionary.com names its word of the year, Waterstones has chosen its book of the year, Reddit is fighting for net neutrality, and Barnes & Noble realizes it's a bookstore. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers, the Amazon Charts, and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is brought to you by "Whiskey Sharp: Unraveled" by New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Lauren Dane. Coming this January and available to preorder today on Amazon.
It is also sponsored by the Indiegogo campaign to bring Michael B. Judkins's poetry to the stage. Visit Indiegogo.com to pledge your support and help fulfill Michael’s vision.
It is also brought to you by our annual #GiveABook campaign. This year we are encouraging you to get out and visit your local independent bookstore to find a book for the ones you love. We’ll be at Walls of Books in Washington, DC, for a series of events that celebrate the power of the story and encourage reading and sharing with all. Find out more at events.aois21.com and www.wallsofbooksdc.com.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and audio.aois21.com. For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-12-03T09_16_53-08_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-12-03T09_16_53-08_00Sun, 03 Dec 2017 17:16:53 +00002017-12-032017-12-03https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-12-03T09_16_53-08_00
aois21 publishing1676noThis week: one copyright lawsuit begot another concerning a popular parody card series, 2017 has been a weird year for bestsellers, Amazon is clashing with publishers, Dictionary.com names its word of the year, Waterstones has chosen its book of the year, Reddit is fighting for net neutrality, and Barnes & Noble realizes it's a bookstore. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers, the Amazon Charts, and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is brought to you by "Whiskey Sharp: Unraveled" by New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Lauren Dane. Coming this January and available to preorder today on Amazon.
It is also sponsored by the Indiegogo campaign to bring Michael B. Judkins's poetry to the stage. Visit Indiegogo.com to pledge your support and help fulfill Michael’s vision.
It is also brought to you by our annual #GiveABook campaign. This year we are encouraging you to get out and visit your local independent bookstore to find a book for the ones you love. We’ll be at Walls of Books in Washington, DC, for a series of events that celebrate the power of the story and encourage reading and sharing with all. Find out more at events.aois21.com and www.wallsofbooksdc.com.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and audio.aois21.com. For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: one copyright lawsuit begot another concerning a popular parody card series, 2017 has ...November 25, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_12324238.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: Africa’s top fact checker has been awarded, booksellers prepare to #ShopSmall, Mashable as a cautionary tale, media struggle to contend with Facebook and Google, do you read science fiction differently?, the Odyssey has been translated by a woman for the first time, and veteran journalist Charlie Rose has lost two honors over sexual allegations. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers, the Amazon Charts, and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is brought to you by "Whiskey Sharp: Unraveled" by New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Lauren Dane. Coming this January and available to preorder today on Amazon.
It is also sponsored by the Indiegogo campaign to bring Michael B. Judkins's poetry to the stage. Visit Indiegogo.com/at/judkins/x to pledge your support and help fulfill Michael’s vision.
It is also brought to you by "American Presidents at War" by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available in eBook, paperback, and hardcover from the aois21 market and Lulu.com with more sites coming soon! Visit events.aois21.com to learn about this week’s launch event at the Library of Congress in Washington, DC.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and audio.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-11-26T10_35_49-08_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-11-26T10_35_49-08_00Sun, 26 Nov 2017 18:35:49 +00002017-11-262017-11-26https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-11-26T10_35_49-08_00
aois21 publishing1712noThis week: Africa’s top fact checker has been awarded, booksellers prepare to #ShopSmall, Mashable as a cautionary tale, media struggle to contend with Facebook and Google, do you read science fiction differently?, the Odyssey has been translated by a woman for the first time, and veteran journalist Charlie Rose has lost two honors over sexual allegations. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers, the Amazon Charts, and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is brought to you by "Whiskey Sharp: Unraveled" by New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Lauren Dane. Coming this January and available to preorder today on Amazon.
It is also sponsored by the Indiegogo campaign to bring Michael B. Judkins's poetry to the stage. Visit Indiegogo.com/at/judkins/x to pledge your support and help fulfill Michael’s vision.
It is also brought to you by "American Presidents at War" by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available in eBook, paperback, and hardcover from the aois21 market and Lulu.com with more sites coming soon! Visit events.aois21.com to learn about this week’s launch event at the Library of Congress in Washington, DC.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and audio.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: Africa’s top fact checker has been awarded, booksellers prepare to #ShopSmall, Mashabl...November 18, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_12324238.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: the comics industry reacts to sexual harassment allegations, Amazon’s Kindle turns 10, publishers and advertisers are still awaiting guidance on new data protection regulations, a British writer and explorer went missing, the National Book Awards were handed out, China’s answer to "The Lord of the Rings" is being translated to English, and Russia is attacking BuzzFeed. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers, the Amazon Charts, and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is brought to you by "Whiskey Sharp: Unraveled" by New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Lauren Dane. Coming this January and available to preorder today on Amazon.
It is also sponsored by the Indiegogo campaign to bring Michael B. Judkins's poetry to the stage. Visit https://indiegogo.com/at/judkins/x to pledge your support and help fulfill Michael’s vision.
It is also brought to you by Small Business Saturday. This November 25th, remember to #ShopSmall in your community and help local business. Visit shopsmall.com for more information!
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and audio.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-11-19T14_56_46-08_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-11-19T14_56_46-08_00Sun, 19 Nov 2017 22:56:46 +00002017-11-192017-11-19https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-11-19T14_56_46-08_00
aois21 publishing1648noThis week: the comics industry reacts to sexual harassment allegations, Amazon’s Kindle turns 10, publishers and advertisers are still awaiting guidance on new data protection regulations, a British writer and explorer went missing, the National Book Awards were handed out, China’s answer to "The Lord of the Rings" is being translated to English, and Russia is attacking BuzzFeed. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers, the Amazon Charts, and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is brought to you by "Whiskey Sharp: Unraveled" by New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Lauren Dane. Coming this January and available to preorder today on Amazon.
It is also sponsored by the Indiegogo campaign to bring Michael B. Judkins's poetry to the stage. Visit https://indiegogo.com/at/judkins/x to pledge your support and help fulfill Michael’s vision.
It is also brought to you by Small Business Saturday. This November 25th, remember to #ShopSmall in your community and help local business. Visit shopsmall.com for more information!
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and audio.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: the comics industry reacts to sexual harassment allegations, Amazon’s Kindle turns 10,...November 11, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_12324238.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />​This week: Seattle has been designated a City of Literature, a new report is predicting the state of libraries in 2025, are advertisers justified in avoiding hard news?, Twitter has doubled its character count, Tom Stoppard received a lifetime achievement award, Amazon announced its best books, and the top congressman on copyright issues announces his retirement. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers, the Amazon Charts, and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is brought to you by "Whiskey Sharp: Unraveled" by New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Lauren Dane. Coming this January and available to preorder today on Amazon.
It is also sponsored by the Indiegogo campaign to bring Michael B. Judkins's poetry to the stage. Visit Indiegogo.com to pledge your support and help fulfill Michael’s vision.
It is also brought to you by Small Business Saturday. This November 25th, remember to #ShopSmall in your community and help local business. Visit shopsmall.com for more information!
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and audio.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-11-12T15_05_45-08_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-11-12T15_05_45-08_00Sun, 12 Nov 2017 23:05:45 +00002017-11-122017-11-12https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-11-12T15_05_45-08_00
aois21 publishing1658no​This week: Seattle has been designated a City of Literature, a new report is predicting the state of libraries in 2025, are advertisers justified in avoiding hard news?, Twitter has doubled its character count, Tom Stoppard received a lifetime achievement award, Amazon announced its best books, and the top congressman on copyright issues announces his retirement. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers, the Amazon Charts, and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is brought to you by "Whiskey Sharp: Unraveled" by New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Lauren Dane. Coming this January and available to preorder today on Amazon.
It is also sponsored by the Indiegogo campaign to bring Michael B. Judkins's poetry to the stage. Visit Indiegogo.com to pledge your support and help fulfill Michael’s vision.
It is also brought to you by Small Business Saturday. This November 25th, remember to #ShopSmall in your community and help local business. Visit shopsmall.com for more information!
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and audio.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.​This week: Seattle has been designated a City of Literature, a new report is predicting the stat...November 4, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_12324238.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: an Internet protocol is fighting censorship, Christian booksellers are filling gaps in their communities, the news subscription is doing better than expected, time for the Goodreads Choice Awards, “Fake News” is the word(s) of the year, Teen Vogue has gone online, and an American has been arrested for a tweet. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers, the Amazon Charts, and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is brought to you by Whiskey Sharp: Unraveled by New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Lauren Dane. Coming this January and available to preorder today on Amazon.
It is also sponsored by the Indiegogo campaign to bring Michael B. Judkins poetry to the stage. Visit Indiegogo.com to pledge your support and help fulfill Michael’s vision.
It is also brought to you by Small Business Saturday. This November 25th, remember to #ShopSmall in your community and help local business. Visit shopsmall.com for more information!
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and audio.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-11-05T13_28_14-08_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-11-05T13_28_14-08_00Sun, 05 Nov 2017 21:28:14 +00002017-11-072017-11-05https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-11-05T13_28_14-08_00
aois21 publishing1415noThis week: an Internet protocol is fighting censorship, Christian booksellers are filling gaps in their communities, the news subscription is doing better than expected, time for the Goodreads Choice Awards, “Fake News” is the word(s) of the year, Teen Vogue has gone online, and an American has been arrested for a tweet. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers, the Amazon Charts, and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is brought to you by Whiskey Sharp: Unraveled by New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Lauren Dane. Coming this January and available to preorder today on Amazon.
It is also sponsored by the Indiegogo campaign to bring Michael B. Judkins poetry to the stage. Visit Indiegogo.com to pledge your support and help fulfill Michael’s vision.
It is also brought to you by Small Business Saturday. This November 25th, remember to #ShopSmall in your community and help local business. Visit shopsmall.com for more information!
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and audio.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: an Internet protocol is fighting censorship, Christian booksellers are filling gaps in...October 28, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_12324238.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: Sony has a trademark problem, how did Pablo Neruda die?, a magazine publisher is making movies now, you eReader is helping medical science, a Biloxi school relents on a controversial book, Bill O’Reilly is without a literary agent, and the New York Times is fighting censorship overseas. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers, the Amazon Charts, and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is brought to you by "Whiskey Sharp: Unraveled" by New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Lauren Dane. Coming this January and available to preorder today on Amazon.
It is also sponsored by the Indiegogo campaign to bring Michael B. Judkins's poetry to the stage. Visit Indiegogo.com to pledge your support and help fulfill Michael’s vision.
It is also brought to you by "American Presidents at War," a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available at market.aois21.com.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-10-29T18_25_09-07_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-10-29T18_25_09-07_00Mon, 30 Oct 2017 01:25:09 +00002017-11-072017-10-30https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-10-29T18_25_09-07_00
aois21 publishing1514noThis week: Sony has a trademark problem, how did Pablo Neruda die?, a magazine publisher is making movies now, you eReader is helping medical science, a Biloxi school relents on a controversial book, Bill O’Reilly is without a literary agent, and the New York Times is fighting censorship overseas. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers, the Amazon Charts, and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is brought to you by "Whiskey Sharp: Unraveled" by New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Lauren Dane. Coming this January and available to preorder today on Amazon.
It is also sponsored by the Indiegogo campaign to bring Michael B. Judkins's poetry to the stage. Visit Indiegogo.com to pledge your support and help fulfill Michael’s vision.
It is also brought to you by "American Presidents at War," a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available at market.aois21.com.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: Sony has a trademark problem, how did Pablo Neruda die?, a magazine publisher is makin...October 21, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_12324238.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: Amazon HQ2 bidding has gotten wild, Weinstein Books is no more, an Anne Frank Halloween costume has drawn complaints, "Lincoln in the Bardo" is the Man Booker Prize winner, NYC libraries are forgiving fines, far-right groups caused trouble at the Frankfurt Book fair, and a gay journalist has been denied asylum in Russia. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers, the Amazon Charts, and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is brought to you by "Whiskey Sharp: Unraveled" by New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Lauren Dane. Coming this January and available to preorder today on Amazon.
It is also brought to you by "American Presidents at War," a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available at market.aois21.com.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com. For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter. You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-10-22T17_25_33-07_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-10-22T17_25_33-07_00Mon, 23 Oct 2017 00:25:33 +00002017-11-072017-10-23https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-10-22T17_25_33-07_00
aois21 publishing1318noThis week: Amazon HQ2 bidding has gotten wild, Weinstein Books is no more, an Anne Frank Halloween costume has drawn complaints, "Lincoln in the Bardo" is the Man Booker Prize winner, NYC libraries are forgiving fines, far-right groups caused trouble at the Frankfurt Book fair, and a gay journalist has been denied asylum in Russia. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers, the Amazon Charts, and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is brought to you by "Whiskey Sharp: Unraveled" by New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Lauren Dane. Coming this January and available to preorder today on Amazon.
It is also brought to you by "American Presidents at War," a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available at market.aois21.com.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com. For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter. You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: Amazon HQ2 bidding has gotten wild, Weinstein Books is no more, an Anne Frank Hallowee...October 14, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_12324238.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: a Canadian museum has launched a new digital collection, a news show host may cancel her book deal over the Harvey Weinstein allegations, a social media evangelist has been named school librarian of the year in the UK, Internet Archives have found a loophole in copyright law, Origin by Dan Brown has had a strong debut, publishers are building up experiential marketing plans, and a Russian blogger is in trouble for sharing an excerpt from a 30-year old novel. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers, the Amazon Charts, and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is brought to you by Whiskey Sharp: Unraveled by New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Lauren Dane. Coming this January and available to preorder today on Amazon.
It is also brought to you by American Presidents at War, a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available at market.aois21.com.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-10-15T21_19_17-07_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-10-15T21_19_17-07_00Mon, 16 Oct 2017 04:19:17 +00002017-11-072017-10-16https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-10-15T21_19_17-07_00
aois21 publishing1416noThis week: a Canadian museum has launched a new digital collection, a news show host may cancel her book deal over the Harvey Weinstein allegations, a social media evangelist has been named school librarian of the year in the UK, Internet Archives have found a loophole in copyright law, Origin by Dan Brown has had a strong debut, publishers are building up experiential marketing plans, and a Russian blogger is in trouble for sharing an excerpt from a 30-year old novel. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers, the Amazon Charts, and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is brought to you by Whiskey Sharp: Unraveled by New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Lauren Dane. Coming this January and available to preorder today on Amazon.
It is also brought to you by American Presidents at War, a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available at market.aois21.com.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: a Canadian museum has launched a new digital collection, a news show host may cancel h...October 7, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_12324238.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: a manuscript of the Book of Mormon has sold for $35 million, what is the Nobel committee looking for, Romance reading is on the rise and Romance readers aren’t happy with the New York Times, Kazuo Ishiguro is your 2017 Nobel Laureate, the copyright fight continues among scientific publications, and U.S. media organizations may be banned in Russia. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers, the Amazon Charts, and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is brought to you by "Whiskey Sharp: Unraveled" by New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Lauren Dane. Coming this January and available to preorder today on Amazon.
It is also brought to you by "American Presidents at War," a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available at market.aois21.com.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com. For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-10-08T13_15_22-07_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-10-08T13_15_22-07_00Sun, 08 Oct 2017 20:15:22 +00002017-11-072017-10-08https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-10-08T13_15_22-07_00
aois21 publishing1372noThis week: a manuscript of the Book of Mormon has sold for $35 million, what is the Nobel committee looking for, Romance reading is on the rise and Romance readers aren’t happy with the New York Times, Kazuo Ishiguro is your 2017 Nobel Laureate, the copyright fight continues among scientific publications, and U.S. media organizations may be banned in Russia. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers, the Amazon Charts, and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is brought to you by "Whiskey Sharp: Unraveled" by New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Lauren Dane. Coming this January and available to preorder today on Amazon.
It is also brought to you by "American Presidents at War," a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available at market.aois21.com.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com. For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: a manuscript of the Book of Mormon has sold for $35 million, what is the Nobel committ...September 30, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_12324238.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: Amazon may have been too specific about their bestseller ratings, bargain books are on the rise, maybe classics shouldn’t be taught to young readers, Amazon Books is coming to DC and Austin, Playboy publisher Hugh Hefner has died, the "5 under 35" has been announced, and Hemingway’s first short story has been found. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers, the Amazon Charts, and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is brought to you by "Whiskey Sharp: Unraveled" by New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Lauren Dane. Coming this January and available to preorder today on Amazon.
It is also brought to you by "American Presidents at War," a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available at market.aois21.com.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-10-01T11_11_43-07_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-10-01T11_11_43-07_00Sun, 01 Oct 2017 18:11:43 +00002017-11-072017-10-01https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-10-01T11_11_43-07_00
aois21 publishing1469noThis week: Amazon may have been too specific about their bestseller ratings, bargain books are on the rise, maybe classics shouldn’t be taught to young readers, Amazon Books is coming to DC and Austin, Playboy publisher Hugh Hefner has died, the "5 under 35" has been announced, and Hemingway’s first short story has been found. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers, the Amazon Charts, and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is brought to you by "Whiskey Sharp: Unraveled" by New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Lauren Dane. Coming this January and available to preorder today on Amazon.
It is also brought to you by "American Presidents at War," a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available at market.aois21.com.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: Amazon may have been too specific about their bestseller ratings, bargain books are on...September 23, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_12324238.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: a 25-word novel has been praised, a literary magazine is using essays to spotlight corner stores, a new collection of resources on the First Amendment is available for free, a Turkish novelist has released a short essay from prison, Hillary Clinton’s new book has set a sales record, one of the top American literary prizes has been awarded, and an exhibit on censorship has been censored. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is brought to you by "Whiskey Sharp: Unraveled" by New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Lauren Dane. Coming this January and available to preorder today on Amazon.
It is also brought to you by "American Presidents at War," a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available at market.aois21.com.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-09-24T10_52_08-07_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-09-24T10_52_08-07_00Sun, 24 Sep 2017 17:52:08 +00002017-11-072017-09-24https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-09-24T10_52_08-07_00
aois21 publishing1440noThis week: a 25-word novel has been praised, a literary magazine is using essays to spotlight corner stores, a new collection of resources on the First Amendment is available for free, a Turkish novelist has released a short essay from prison, Hillary Clinton’s new book has set a sales record, one of the top American literary prizes has been awarded, and an exhibit on censorship has been censored. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is brought to you by "Whiskey Sharp: Unraveled" by New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Lauren Dane. Coming this January and available to preorder today on Amazon.
It is also brought to you by "American Presidents at War," a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available at market.aois21.com.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: a 25-word novel has been praised, a literary magazine is using essays to spotlight cor...September 16, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_12324238.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: UNESCO releases its global literacy report, early reviews of "Waiting for Godot" have been digitized, Amazon is after fraudulent booksellers, the Man Booker short list is out, Amazon has removed one-star reviews of Hillary Clinton’s new book, Melville House is sending impeachment guides to Congress, and the National Book Award has released its long lists. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is brought to you by American Presidents at War, a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available at market.aois21.com.
It is also brought to you by “Dating” as told by the Modern Whore by Aylin Vega. The best selling risqué eBook is now available in paperback from Lulu.com. Pick up your copy today!
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-09-17T17_12_40-07_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-09-17T17_12_40-07_00Mon, 18 Sep 2017 00:12:40 +00002017-11-072017-09-18https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-09-17T17_12_40-07_00
aois21 publishing1487noThis week: UNESCO releases its global literacy report, early reviews of "Waiting for Godot" have been digitized, Amazon is after fraudulent booksellers, the Man Booker short list is out, Amazon has removed one-star reviews of Hillary Clinton’s new book, Melville House is sending impeachment guides to Congress, and the National Book Award has released its long lists. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is brought to you by American Presidents at War, a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available at market.aois21.com.
It is also brought to you by “Dating” as told by the Modern Whore by Aylin Vega. The best selling risqué eBook is now available in paperback from Lulu.com. Pick up your copy today!
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: UNESCO releases its global literacy report, early reviews of "Waiting for Godot" have ...September 9, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_12324238.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: a comic book store in Philly is closing, a website outage hurt indie bookstore sales, a conservative publisher is shunning the NYT Best Sellers list, video game writers are now eligible for the Nebula Awards, bookstores need help recovering from Hurricane Harvey, it’s not easy carrying on a book series with a new author, and a classic holiday movie is becoming a holiday book, but maybe not for kids. All this, plus the New York Times Best Sellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is brought to you by American Presidents at War, a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available for preorder at market.aois21.com.
It is also brought to you by “Dating” as told by the Modern Whore by Aylin Vega. The best-selling risqué eBook is now available in paperback from Lulu.com. Pick up your copy today!
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-09-10T12_56_28-07_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-09-10T12_56_28-07_00Sun, 10 Sep 2017 19:56:28 +00002017-11-072017-09-10https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-09-10T12_56_28-07_00
aois21 publishing1548noThis week: a comic book store in Philly is closing, a website outage hurt indie bookstore sales, a conservative publisher is shunning the NYT Best Sellers list, video game writers are now eligible for the Nebula Awards, bookstores need help recovering from Hurricane Harvey, it’s not easy carrying on a book series with a new author, and a classic holiday movie is becoming a holiday book, but maybe not for kids. All this, plus the New York Times Best Sellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is brought to you by American Presidents at War, a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available for preorder at market.aois21.com.
It is also brought to you by “Dating” as told by the Modern Whore by Aylin Vega. The best-selling risqué eBook is now available in paperback from Lulu.com. Pick up your copy today!
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: a comic book store in Philly is closing, a website outage hurt indie bookstore sales, ...September 2, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_12324238.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: Spielberg’s upcoming movie about the Washington Post has a new title, a Japanese bookseller is expanding in the US, a New Mexico public library was the site of a shooting, the Newseum may be closing their doors, book festivals are keeping books alive, archaeologists have discovered the tomb of China’s Shakespeare, and the UNESCO Confucius prize was awarded. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is brought to you by American Presidents at War, a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available for preorder at market.aois21.com.
It is also brought to you by “Dating” as told by the Modern Whore by Aylin Vega. The best selling risqué eBook is now available in paperback from Lulu.com. Pick up your copy today!
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-09-03T13_53_30-07_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-09-03T13_53_30-07_00Sun, 03 Sep 2017 20:53:30 +00002017-11-072017-09-03https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-09-03T13_53_30-07_00
aois21 publishing1562noThis week: Spielberg’s upcoming movie about the Washington Post has a new title, a Japanese bookseller is expanding in the US, a New Mexico public library was the site of a shooting, the Newseum may be closing their doors, book festivals are keeping books alive, archaeologists have discovered the tomb of China’s Shakespeare, and the UNESCO Confucius prize was awarded. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is brought to you by American Presidents at War, a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available for preorder at market.aois21.com.
It is also brought to you by “Dating” as told by the Modern Whore by Aylin Vega. The best selling risqué eBook is now available in paperback from Lulu.com. Pick up your copy today!
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: Spielberg’s upcoming movie about the Washington Post has a new title, a Japanese books...August 26, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_12324238.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: a library of classics was destroyed in Italy, a comic book store was sold through Facebook, Huff Post is booming with its new homepage, Solzhenitsyn’s epic will soon be in English, an outed CIA operative wants to boot President Trump from Twitter, a little known author is called out for fixing the bestseller list, and Argentina celebrates a beloved author. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is brought to you by American Presidents at War, a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available for preorder at market.aois21.com.
It is also brought to you by Tales from the Old New Land podcast, hosted by A.C. Charlap, available biweekly from the aois21 podcast network. Find it on Podomatic, wherever podcasts are available, and media.aois21.com.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-08-27T21_01_50-07_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-08-27T21_01_50-07_00Mon, 28 Aug 2017 04:01:50 +00002017-11-072017-08-28https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-08-27T21_01_50-07_00
aois21 publishing1181noThis week: a library of classics was destroyed in Italy, a comic book store was sold through Facebook, Huff Post is booming with its new homepage, Solzhenitsyn’s epic will soon be in English, an outed CIA operative wants to boot President Trump from Twitter, a little known author is called out for fixing the bestseller list, and Argentina celebrates a beloved author. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is brought to you by American Presidents at War, a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available for preorder at market.aois21.com.
It is also brought to you by Tales from the Old New Land podcast, hosted by A.C. Charlap, available biweekly from the aois21 podcast network. Find it on Podomatic, wherever podcasts are available, and media.aois21.com.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: a library of classics was destroyed in Italy, a comic book store was sold through Face...August 19, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_12324238.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: a comic book publisher is moving into gaming, an ancient library is discovering lost poetry, Amazon is everywhere, Russian publishers are cutting LGBT references from books, a UVA Librarian had a stroke after protesting, Spotify is dropping the music of hate speech, and Breitbart News gets a high-profile new old employee. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is brought to you by Will This Be on the Final?, the second poetry collection from Bianca Palmisano, now available in print from Lulu.com, and in eBook everywhere.
It is also sponsored by American Presidents at War, a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available for preorder at market.aois21.com.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-08-20T20_23_24-07_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-08-20T20_23_24-07_00Mon, 21 Aug 2017 03:23:24 +00002017-11-072017-08-21https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-08-20T20_23_24-07_00
aois21 publishing1251noThis week: a comic book publisher is moving into gaming, an ancient library is discovering lost poetry, Amazon is everywhere, Russian publishers are cutting LGBT references from books, a UVA Librarian had a stroke after protesting, Spotify is dropping the music of hate speech, and Breitbart News gets a high-profile new old employee. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is brought to you by Will This Be on the Final?, the second poetry collection from Bianca Palmisano, now available in print from Lulu.com, and in eBook everywhere.
It is also sponsored by American Presidents at War, a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available for preorder at market.aois21.com.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: a comic book publisher is moving into gaming, an ancient library is discovering lost p...August 12, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_11486294.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: Comic legend George Perez receives the Eisner award, children’s authors are sharing refugee stories, what is a programmatic analyst?, books are swearing more than they used to, the New York Public Library has two rooms designated as landmarks, UK poets are honoring dialects for National Poetry Day, and the Hugo Awards were announced. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by American Presidents at War, a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available for preorder at market.aois21.com.
It is also sponsored by the Walk to End Alzheimers’, this October on the National Mall. Support aois21’s walk at alz.org/goto/aois21/ and help us #SaveTheStories.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-08-13T15_07_11-07_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-08-13T15_07_11-07_00Sun, 13 Aug 2017 22:07:11 +00002017-11-072017-08-13https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-08-13T15_07_11-07_00
aois21 publishing1421yesThis week: Comic legend George Perez receives the Eisner award, children’s authors are sharing refugee stories, what is a programmatic analyst?, books are swearing more than they used to, the New York Public Library has two rooms designated as landmarks, UK poets are honoring dialects for National Poetry Day, and the Hugo Awards were announced. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by American Presidents at War, a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available for preorder at market.aois21.com.
It is also sponsored by the Walk to End Alzheimers’, this October on the National Mall. Support aois21’s walk at alz.org/goto/aois21/ and help us #SaveTheStories.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: Comic legend George Perez receives the Eisner award, children’s authors are sharing re...August 5, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_11486294.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: Rebecca Blunt is a real screenwriter, honest; a complaint has been filed against the Iowa Writers Workshop; has a Netflix adaptation of a YA novel increased suicides?; the next Star Wars has a new cowriter; the former FBI director has a book deal; a Drag Queen has been blocked from reading to children; and JK Rowling is the world’s highest-paid author. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by American Presidents at War, a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available for preorder at market.aois21.com.
It is also sponsored by the Walk to End Alzheimers’, this October on the National Mall. Support aois21’s walk at alz.org/goto/aois21/ and help us #SaveTheStories.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-08-06T15_23_53-07_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-08-06T15_23_53-07_00Sun, 06 Aug 2017 22:23:53 +00002017-11-072017-08-06https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-08-06T15_23_53-07_00
aois21 publishing1406noThis week: Rebecca Blunt is a real screenwriter, honest; a complaint has been filed against the Iowa Writers Workshop; has a Netflix adaptation of a YA novel increased suicides?; the next Star Wars has a new cowriter; the former FBI director has a book deal; a Drag Queen has been blocked from reading to children; and JK Rowling is the world’s highest-paid author. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by American Presidents at War, a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available for preorder at market.aois21.com.
It is also sponsored by the Walk to End Alzheimers’, this October on the National Mall. Support aois21’s walk at alz.org/goto/aois21/ and help us #SaveTheStories.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: Rebecca Blunt is a real screenwriter, honest; a complaint has been filed against the I...July 29, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_11486294.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: an Iranian author has been denied a UK visa, the next Games of Thrones book may be out in 2018, Publishers have stepped up to help a UK school, Google has an intellectual property problem, the Village Voice staff is fighting for its rights, Amazon’s Jeff Bezos was briefly the richest person in the world, and an actress is launching a new digital media company. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by American Presidents at War, a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available for preorder at market.aois21.com.
It is also sponsored by the Walk to End Alzheimers’, this October on the National Mall. Support aois21’s walk at alz.org/goto/aois21/ and help us #SaveTheStories.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-07-30T11_01_39-07_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-07-30T11_01_39-07_00Sun, 30 Jul 2017 18:01:39 +00002017-11-072017-07-30https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-07-30T11_01_39-07_00
aois21 publishing1379noThis week: an Iranian author has been denied a UK visa, the next Games of Thrones book may be out in 2018, Publishers have stepped up to help a UK school, Google has an intellectual property problem, the Village Voice staff is fighting for its rights, Amazon’s Jeff Bezos was briefly the richest person in the world, and an actress is launching a new digital media company. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by American Presidents at War, a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available for preorder at market.aois21.com.
It is also sponsored by the Walk to End Alzheimers’, this October on the National Mall. Support aois21’s walk at alz.org/goto/aois21/ and help us #SaveTheStories.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: an Iranian author has been denied a UK visa, the next Games of Thrones book may be out...July 22, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_11486294.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: James Comey is shopping a book, but it's not a tell-all, the U.K. Government is urged to support freelancers, publishers are all in on VR even if the public isn't, two new Harry Potter books are coming this fall, a reporter has broken the silence at the White House, is American English devouring British English?, and Russia has some complaints with Google. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by "American Presidents at War," a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available for preorder at market.aois21.com.
It is also sponsored by the Walk to End Alzheimers’, this October on the National Mall. Support aois21’s walk at alz.org/goto/aois21/ and help us #SaveTheStories.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com. For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon. If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-07-23T10_01_46-07_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-07-23T10_01_46-07_00Sun, 23 Jul 2017 17:01:46 +00002017-11-072017-07-23https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-07-23T10_01_46-07_00
aois21 publishing1399noThis week: James Comey is shopping a book, but it's not a tell-all, the U.K. Government is urged to support freelancers, publishers are all in on VR even if the public isn't, two new Harry Potter books are coming this fall, a reporter has broken the silence at the White House, is American English devouring British English?, and Russia has some complaints with Google. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by "American Presidents at War," a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available for preorder at market.aois21.com.
It is also sponsored by the Walk to End Alzheimers’, this October on the National Mall. Support aois21’s walk at alz.org/goto/aois21/ and help us #SaveTheStories.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com. For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon. If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: James Comey is shopping a book, but it's not a tell-all, the U.K. Government is urged ...July 15, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_11486294.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: you can crowd fund a comic created by Trans artists, the accuracy of historical markers, Goop the magazine is coming, a slice of Penguin Random House has sold for $1 billion, UK man was arrested with a controversial book, just how many books did Milo Yiannopoulus sell?, and a new bookstore in DC will honor a slain journalist. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by American Presidents at War, a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available for preorder at market.aois21.com.
It is also sponsored by the Walk to End Alzheimers’, this October on the National Mall. Support aois21’s walk at alz.org/goto/aois21/ and help us #SaveTheStories.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-07-16T17_38_46-07_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-07-16T17_38_46-07_00Mon, 17 Jul 2017 00:38:46 +00002017-11-072017-07-17https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-07-16T17_38_46-07_00
aois21 publishing1368noThis week: you can crowd fund a comic created by Trans artists, the accuracy of historical markers, Goop the magazine is coming, a slice of Penguin Random House has sold for $1 billion, UK man was arrested with a controversial book, just how many books did Milo Yiannopoulus sell?, and a new bookstore in DC will honor a slain journalist. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by American Presidents at War, a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available for preorder at market.aois21.com.
It is also sponsored by the Walk to End Alzheimers’, this October on the National Mall. Support aois21’s walk at alz.org/goto/aois21/ and help us #SaveTheStories.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: you can crowd fund a comic created by Trans artists, the accuracy of historical marker...July 8, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_11486294.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: how Supreme Court cases are effecting libraries, Sony is pressing records again, Amazon is drawing publishers with a new device, NPR drew some unexpected ire on Twitter, there is peace in Middle Earth and at the casino, a new Maurice Sendak book has been found, and the possible largest bookstore in the world has opened in an unlikely place. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by American Presidents at War, a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available for preorder at market.aois21.com. It is also sponsored by Will This be on the Final?, the second poetry collection by Bianca Palmisano. Built on her experiences studying abroad, it is now available in paperback from Lulu.com. Find it everywhere eBooks are sold including media.aois21.com!
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com. For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter. You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon. If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-07-09T18_06_40-07_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-07-09T18_06_40-07_00Mon, 10 Jul 2017 01:06:40 +00002017-11-072017-07-10https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-07-09T18_06_40-07_00
aois21 publishing1252noThis week: how Supreme Court cases are effecting libraries, Sony is pressing records again, Amazon is drawing publishers with a new device, NPR drew some unexpected ire on Twitter, there is peace in Middle Earth and at the casino, a new Maurice Sendak book has been found, and the possible largest bookstore in the world has opened in an unlikely place. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by American Presidents at War, a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available for preorder at market.aois21.com. It is also sponsored by Will This be on the Final?, the second poetry collection by Bianca Palmisano. Built on her experiences studying abroad, it is now available in paperback from Lulu.com. Find it everywhere eBooks are sold including media.aois21.com!
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com. For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter. You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon. If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: how Supreme Court cases are effecting libraries, Sony is pressing records again, Amazo...June 24, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_11486293.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: a British author has been honored by the Queen, the New York Times discusses moderating comments sections, two Americans have won the Carnegie and Greenaway prizes, publishers are coming to the defense of Greenpeace, police in Benghazi are burning books, Emma Watson is hiding books around Paris, and a book full of blank pages is a bestseller on Amazon, again. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by Virginia Comicon, coming up July 8th and 9th on the VCU campus in Richmond, VA. aois21 will be on hand with aois21 titles and new merchandise and we’ll be interviewing cosplayers about the stories behind their elaborate gear. Visit events.aois21.com for more information.
It is also sponsored by American Presidents at War, a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available for preorder at market.aois21.com
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-06-24T22_22_16-07_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-06-24T22_22_16-07_00Sun, 25 Jun 2017 05:22:16 +00002017-11-072017-06-25https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-06-24T22_22_16-07_00
aois21 publishing1455noThis week: a British author has been honored by the Queen, the New York Times discusses moderating comments sections, two Americans have won the Carnegie and Greenaway prizes, publishers are coming to the defense of Greenpeace, police in Benghazi are burning books, Emma Watson is hiding books around Paris, and a book full of blank pages is a bestseller on Amazon, again. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by Virginia Comicon, coming up July 8th and 9th on the VCU campus in Richmond, VA. aois21 will be on hand with aois21 titles and new merchandise and we’ll be interviewing cosplayers about the stories behind their elaborate gear. Visit events.aois21.com for more information.
It is also sponsored by American Presidents at War, a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available for preorder at market.aois21.com
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: a British author has been honored by the Queen, the New York Times discusses moderatin...June 17, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_11486294.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: Singapore’s library board has pulled a controversial book series, Canada is reviving a lost language through film, a Shakespeare performance has caused outrage, there’s a new U.S. Poet Laureate, the Man Booker Prize was announced, the first review of Milo Yiannopolous Dangerous is out, and there’s a new non fiction award for self published authors. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by Will this be on the Final?, the second poetry collection by Bianca Palmisano. Available soon in print from Lulu.com.
It is also sponsored by American Presidents at War, a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available for preorder at market.aois21.com
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-06-18T21_08_58-07_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-06-18T21_08_58-07_00Mon, 19 Jun 2017 04:08:58 +00002017-11-072017-06-19https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-06-18T21_08_58-07_00
aois21 publishing1370noThis week: Singapore’s library board has pulled a controversial book series, Canada is reviving a lost language through film, a Shakespeare performance has caused outrage, there’s a new U.S. Poet Laureate, the Man Booker Prize was announced, the first review of Milo Yiannopolous Dangerous is out, and there’s a new non fiction award for self published authors. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by Will this be on the Final?, the second poetry collection by Bianca Palmisano. Available soon in print from Lulu.com.
It is also sponsored by American Presidents at War, a new nonfiction scholarly review by Thomas P. Athridge. Now available for preorder at market.aois21.com
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: Singapore’s library board has pulled a controversial book series, Canada is reviving a...June 10, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_11486294.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: the works of Marquez are being translated in Arabic, a century old lit mag is reborn, Al Jazeera is accused of supporting terrorism, Bob Dylan gave his Nobel lecture, celebrities are becoming storytellers-in-chief, you can read for free on the New York City Subway, and Russia has convicted the Ukrainian Librarian for extremism. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by Will this be on the Final?, the second poetry collection by Bianca Palmisano. Available soon in print from Lulu.com.
It is also sponsored by HIVE: Battle at the Dog Star, the second book in the HIVE Series by James D. King. Find HIVE in paperback from Lulu and wherever eBooks are sold, including market.aois21.com
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-06-12T21_49_51-07_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-06-12T21_49_51-07_00Tue, 13 Jun 2017 04:49:51 +00002017-11-072017-06-13https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-06-12T21_49_51-07_00
aois21 publishing1329noThis week: the works of Marquez are being translated in Arabic, a century old lit mag is reborn, Al Jazeera is accused of supporting terrorism, Bob Dylan gave his Nobel lecture, celebrities are becoming storytellers-in-chief, you can read for free on the New York City Subway, and Russia has convicted the Ukrainian Librarian for extremism. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by Will this be on the Final?, the second poetry collection by Bianca Palmisano. Available soon in print from Lulu.com.
It is also sponsored by HIVE: Battle at the Dog Star, the second book in the HIVE Series by James D. King. Find HIVE in paperback from Lulu and wherever eBooks are sold, including market.aois21.com
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: the works of Marquez are being translated in Arabic, a century old lit mag is reborn, ...June 3, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_11486294.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: Neil Gaiman has been challenged to read a menu, a novel from 1985 is topping bestseller lists, is this the year of the blockbuster novel?, the Baltimore Book Festival dropped a controversial author, the National Willa Cather Center has opened, Europe is dropping taxes on eBooks, and the German Government has passed an Open Data act. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by Will this be on the Final?, the second poetry collection by Bianca Palmisano. Available soon in print from Lulu.com.
It is also sponsored by “Dating” as told by the Modern Whore by Aylin Vega. This sexual memoir skirts the edges of risqué as Vega shares her own sexual adventures. Find “Dating” across the web as an eBook or in paperback from Lulu.com.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-06-04T13_58_16-07_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-06-04T13_58_16-07_00Sun, 04 Jun 2017 20:58:16 +00002017-11-072017-06-04https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-06-04T13_58_16-07_00
aois21 publishing1423noThis week: Neil Gaiman has been challenged to read a menu, a novel from 1985 is topping bestseller lists, is this the year of the blockbuster novel?, the Baltimore Book Festival dropped a controversial author, the National Willa Cather Center has opened, Europe is dropping taxes on eBooks, and the German Government has passed an Open Data act. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by Will this be on the Final?, the second poetry collection by Bianca Palmisano. Available soon in print from Lulu.com.
It is also sponsored by “Dating” as told by the Modern Whore by Aylin Vega. This sexual memoir skirts the edges of risqué as Vega shares her own sexual adventures. Find “Dating” across the web as an eBook or in paperback from Lulu.com.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: Neil Gaiman has been challenged to read a menu, a novel from 1985 is topping bestselle...May 25, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_11486294.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: the public may be experiencing Trump Fatigue, Indie Presses are stepping up in New Mexico, are the keyboard’s days numbered?, Amazon Bookstores are coming to LA, there’s a new book genre, a bookstore is opening to honor a slain journalist, and a Chinese book chain celebrates 80 years. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by Will this be on the Final?, the second poetry collection by Bianca Palmisano. Available soon in print from Lulu.com.
It is also sponsored by “Dating” as told by the Modern Whore by Aylin Vega. This sexual memoir skirts the edges of risqué as Vega shares her own sexual adventures. Find “Dating” across the web as an eBook or in paperback from Lulu.com.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-05-28T21_34_45-07_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-05-28T21_34_45-07_00Mon, 29 May 2017 04:34:45 +00002017-11-072017-05-29https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-05-28T21_34_45-07_00
aois21 publishing1444noThis week: the public may be experiencing Trump Fatigue, Indie Presses are stepping up in New Mexico, are the keyboard’s days numbered?, Amazon Bookstores are coming to LA, there’s a new book genre, a bookstore is opening to honor a slain journalist, and a Chinese book chain celebrates 80 years. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by Will this be on the Final?, the second poetry collection by Bianca Palmisano. Available soon in print from Lulu.com.
It is also sponsored by “Dating” as told by the Modern Whore by Aylin Vega. This sexual memoir skirts the edges of risqué as Vega shares her own sexual adventures. Find “Dating” across the web as an eBook or in paperback from Lulu.com.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: the public may be experiencing Trump Fatigue, Indie Presses are stepping up in New Mex...May 6, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_11486294.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: saving a library in Timbuktu, the secrets of ghostwriters, the last wishes of a departed writer are being optioned for a movie, Hollywood writers may not be going on strike, how an indie publisher is shaking up Twitter, the rise of comic book biographies, and Librarians storm Capitol Hill. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by the Gaithersburg Book Festival. Come one, come all May 20th to Gaithersburg, MD and celebrate the power of the written word. Several authors will be on hand and the event will be broadcast on C-SPAN’s BookTV. To find out more visit www.gaithersburgbookfestival.org.
It is also sponsored by “Dating” as told by the Modern Whore by Aylin Vega. This sexual memoir skirts the edges of risqué as Vega shares her own sexual adventures. Find “Dating” across the web as an eBook or in paperback from Lulu.com.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-05-07T09_34_05-07_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-05-07T09_34_05-07_00Sun, 07 May 2017 16:34:05 +00002017-11-072017-05-07https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-05-07T09_34_05-07_00
aois21 publishing1528noThis week: saving a library in Timbuktu, the secrets of ghostwriters, the last wishes of a departed writer are being optioned for a movie, Hollywood writers may not be going on strike, how an indie publisher is shaking up Twitter, the rise of comic book biographies, and Librarians storm Capitol Hill. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by the Gaithersburg Book Festival. Come one, come all May 20th to Gaithersburg, MD and celebrate the power of the written word. Several authors will be on hand and the event will be broadcast on C-SPAN’s BookTV. To find out more visit www.gaithersburgbookfestival.org.
It is also sponsored by “Dating” as told by the Modern Whore by Aylin Vega. This sexual memoir skirts the edges of risqué as Vega shares her own sexual adventures. Find “Dating” across the web as an eBook or in paperback from Lulu.com.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: saving a library in Timbuktu, the secrets of ghostwriters, the last wishes of a depart...April 29, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_11486294.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: the 44-year battle to resurrect the Globe Theatre, James Bond is getting a back story in comics, Wikipedia is taking on fake news, San Diego libraries are cutting back, Copyright Reform has passed the House, If you read a lot you may be the best lover, and Indies are on the rise for Independent Bookstore Day. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by Will This Be on the Final? by Bianca Palmisano. The second poetry collection by Palmisano is now available as an eBook and will be available in print soon from Lulu.com. Visit aois21.com for more information.
It is also sponsored by “Dating” as told by the Modern Whore by Aylin Vega. This sexual memoir skirts the edges of risqué as Vega shares her own sexual adventures. Find “Dating” across the web as an eBook or in paperback from Lulu.com.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-04-30T08_51_40-07_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-04-30T08_51_40-07_00Sun, 30 Apr 2017 15:51:40 +00002017-11-072017-04-30https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-04-30T08_51_40-07_00
aois21 publishing1526noThis week: the 44-year battle to resurrect the Globe Theatre, James Bond is getting a back story in comics, Wikipedia is taking on fake news, San Diego libraries are cutting back, Copyright Reform has passed the House, If you read a lot you may be the best lover, and Indies are on the rise for Independent Bookstore Day. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by Will This Be on the Final? by Bianca Palmisano. The second poetry collection by Palmisano is now available as an eBook and will be available in print soon from Lulu.com. Visit aois21.com for more information.
It is also sponsored by “Dating” as told by the Modern Whore by Aylin Vega. This sexual memoir skirts the edges of risqué as Vega shares her own sexual adventures. Find “Dating” across the web as an eBook or in paperback from Lulu.com.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: the 44-year battle to resurrect the Globe Theatre, James Bond is getting a back story ...April 22, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_11067018.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: A Maryland Country is losing their longtime Librarian, Are Parents learning poetry?, The rise of blank books, News publishers are using Apple News more, A Self Published author has offered a prize for readers, Bill O’Reilly’s publisher is standing pat, and Twitter has struck a deal to stay on in Russia. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by Will This Be on the Final? by Bianca Palmisano. The second poetry collection by Palmisano is now available as an eBook and will be available in print soon from Lulu.com. Visit aois21.com for more information.
It is also sponsored by “Dating” as told by the Modern Whore by Aylin Vega. This sexual memoir skirts the edges of risqué as Vega shares her own sexual adventures. Find “Dating” across the web as an eBook or in paperback from Lulu.com.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-04-23T18_19_02-07_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-04-23T18_19_02-07_00Mon, 24 Apr 2017 01:19:02 +00002017-11-072017-04-24https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-04-23T18_19_02-07_00
aois21 publishing1601noThis week: A Maryland Country is losing their longtime Librarian, Are Parents learning poetry?, The rise of blank books, News publishers are using Apple News more, A Self Published author has offered a prize for readers, Bill O’Reilly’s publisher is standing pat, and Twitter has struck a deal to stay on in Russia. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by Will This Be on the Final? by Bianca Palmisano. The second poetry collection by Palmisano is now available as an eBook and will be available in print soon from Lulu.com. Visit aois21.com for more information.
It is also sponsored by “Dating” as told by the Modern Whore by Aylin Vega. This sexual memoir skirts the edges of risqué as Vega shares her own sexual adventures. Find “Dating” across the web as an eBook or in paperback from Lulu.com.
Literally This Week is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: A Maryland Country is losing their longtime Librarian, Are Parents learning poetry?, T...April 15, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_11486294.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: Louisiana’s archives are at risk, Indie bookstores in the UK have been awarded, the Pulitzer Prizes have been announced, We’ve got the Top Ten Challenged books of 2016, A new ALA President has been elected, Margaret Atwood tells how her novel isn’t that fictional, and a new conglomerate is producing audiobooks. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by the Kensington Day of the Book. Sunday, April 23rd from 11 to 4 in Kensington, Maryland. Come out to see live musical performances, local authors, exhibitors, and other literary events. Visit www.dayofthebook.com for more information.
It is also brought to you by Sexed Vexed Perplexed Live! This Thursday at 10 pm ET, Aylin Vega will be live on WDLS Internet Radio at WDLSradio.net to take your questions and offer advice. Tweet @themodernwhore to ask your questions beforehand or call in after 10!
Literally This Week is available on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-04-16T20_53_47-07_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-04-16T20_53_47-07_00Mon, 17 Apr 2017 03:53:47 +00002017-11-072017-04-17https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-04-16T20_53_47-07_00
aois21 publishing1369noThis week: Louisiana’s archives are at risk, Indie bookstores in the UK have been awarded, the Pulitzer Prizes have been announced, We’ve got the Top Ten Challenged books of 2016, A new ALA President has been elected, Margaret Atwood tells how her novel isn’t that fictional, and a new conglomerate is producing audiobooks. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by the Kensington Day of the Book. Sunday, April 23rd from 11 to 4 in Kensington, Maryland. Come out to see live musical performances, local authors, exhibitors, and other literary events. Visit www.dayofthebook.com for more information.
It is also brought to you by Sexed Vexed Perplexed Live! This Thursday at 10 pm ET, Aylin Vega will be live on WDLS Internet Radio at WDLSradio.net to take your questions and offer advice. Tweet @themodernwhore to ask your questions beforehand or call in after 10!
Literally This Week is available on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: Louisiana’s archives are at risk, Indie bookstores in the UK have been awarded, the Pu...April 8, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_11486294.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: Bob Dylan has finally received his Nobel Prize, there’s now a doomsday vault for data, George Takei is writing a graphic novel, the Webby Awards nominees have been announced, Amazon Books is coming to New York, there is now a wheel of old book smells, and there’s a reason audiobooks are on the rise. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by the Kensington Day of the Book. Sunday, April 23rd from 11 to 4 in Kensington, Maryland. Come out to see live musical performances, local authors, exhibitors, and other literary events. Visit www.dayofthebook.com for more information.
It is also brought to you by “Dating” as Told by the Modern Whore by Aylin Vega. The collection of Aylin’s sexual adventures is now available in paperback from Lulu.com. Pick up your copy today! #BetterThan50Shades
Literally This Week is available on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-04-09T15_11_56-07_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-04-09T15_11_56-07_00Sun, 09 Apr 2017 22:11:56 +00002017-11-072017-04-09https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-04-09T15_11_56-07_00
aois21 publishing1459noThis week: Bob Dylan has finally received his Nobel Prize, there’s now a doomsday vault for data, George Takei is writing a graphic novel, the Webby Awards nominees have been announced, Amazon Books is coming to New York, there is now a wheel of old book smells, and there’s a reason audiobooks are on the rise. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by the Kensington Day of the Book. Sunday, April 23rd from 11 to 4 in Kensington, Maryland. Come out to see live musical performances, local authors, exhibitors, and other literary events. Visit www.dayofthebook.com for more information.
It is also brought to you by “Dating” as Told by the Modern Whore by Aylin Vega. The collection of Aylin’s sexual adventures is now available in paperback from Lulu.com. Pick up your copy today! #BetterThan50Shades
Literally This Week is available on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: Bob Dylan has finally received his Nobel Prize, there’s now a doomsday vault for data,...April 1, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_11486294.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: one author is getting almost no royalties from an adaptation of his work, the Writer’s Guild may go on strike, the AP takes a step toward gender acceptance, the Library of Congress adds to the National Recording Registry, the PEN/Literary Awards were handed out, the FCC privacy rollback may be helpful for publishers, and two U.S journalists were attacked in Russia. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by HIVE: Battle at the Dog Star by James D. King. Available now in paperback from Lulu.com. Download it today wherever eBooks are sold and join the fight against the Insectoid scourge.
It is also brought to you by “Dating” as Told by the Modern Whore by Aylin Vega. The collection of Aylin’s sexual adventures is now available in paperback from Lulu.com. Pick up your copy today! #BetterThan50Shades
Literally This Week is available on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-04-02T18_53_24-07_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-04-02T18_53_24-07_00Mon, 03 Apr 2017 01:53:24 +00002017-11-072017-04-03https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-04-02T18_53_24-07_00
aois21 publishing1724noThis week: one author is getting almost no royalties from an adaptation of his work, the Writer’s Guild may go on strike, the AP takes a step toward gender acceptance, the Library of Congress adds to the National Recording Registry, the PEN/Literary Awards were handed out, the FCC privacy rollback may be helpful for publishers, and two U.S journalists were attacked in Russia. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by HIVE: Battle at the Dog Star by James D. King. Available now in paperback from Lulu.com. Download it today wherever eBooks are sold and join the fight against the Insectoid scourge.
It is also brought to you by “Dating” as Told by the Modern Whore by Aylin Vega. The collection of Aylin’s sexual adventures is now available in paperback from Lulu.com. Pick up your copy today! #BetterThan50Shades
Literally This Week is available on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: one author is getting almost no royalties from an adaptation of his work, the Writer’s...March 25, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_11486294.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: what killed Jane Austen?, RIP founder of New York Review of Books, what New Yorkers will be reading, authors respond to NEA cuts, checking out Amazon’s neighborhood bookstore, looking toward the Fall for the Book, and religious publishers filling the religious gap. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by HIVE: Battle at the Dog Star by James D. King. Available now in paperback from Lulu.com. Download it today wherever eBooks are sold.
It is also brought to you by #TryPod, an endeavor to encourage and share the joy of podcast listening with a wider audience. Share your experience today on Twitter and Facebook using the #TryPod.
Literally This Week is available on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Tune In, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-03-26T21_32_15-07_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-03-26T21_32_15-07_00Mon, 27 Mar 2017 04:32:15 +00002017-11-072017-03-27https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-03-26T21_32_15-07_00
aois21 publishing1648noThis week: what killed Jane Austen?, RIP founder of New York Review of Books, what New Yorkers will be reading, authors respond to NEA cuts, checking out Amazon’s neighborhood bookstore, looking toward the Fall for the Book, and religious publishers filling the religious gap. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by HIVE: Battle at the Dog Star by James D. King. Available now in paperback from Lulu.com. Download it today wherever eBooks are sold.
It is also brought to you by #TryPod, an endeavor to encourage and share the joy of podcast listening with a wider audience. Share your experience today on Twitter and Facebook using the #TryPod.
Literally This Week is available on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Tune In, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: what killed Jane Austen?, RIP founder of New York Review of Books, what New Yorkers wi...March 18, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_11486294.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: the BBC is helping Alzheimer’s patients remember, the World Wide Web turns 28, two news organizations will be sharing a journalist, a New York book fair takes a step toward equality, the Oxford Comma matters, President Trump wants to cut the NEA, and indie publisher George Braziller has died. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by HIVE: Battle at the Dog Star by James D. King. Available soon in paperback from Lulu.com. Download it today wherever eBooks are sold.
It is also brought to you by Sexed Vexed Perplexed Live! on WDLS Internet Radio. The Modern Whore Aylin Vega will be taking questions live Thursday night from 10 to 11. Tweet your questions beforehand @themodernwhore, or visit the Facebook event page at Facebook.com/SVPPodcast. Listen live Thursday night at www.WDLSradio.net.
Literally This Week is available on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Tune In, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-03-19T19_48_00-07_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-03-19T19_48_00-07_00Mon, 20 Mar 2017 02:48:00 +00002017-11-072017-03-20https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-03-19T19_48_00-07_00
aois21 publishing1537noThis week: the BBC is helping Alzheimer’s patients remember, the World Wide Web turns 28, two news organizations will be sharing a journalist, a New York book fair takes a step toward equality, the Oxford Comma matters, President Trump wants to cut the NEA, and indie publisher George Braziller has died. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by HIVE: Battle at the Dog Star by James D. King. Available soon in paperback from Lulu.com. Download it today wherever eBooks are sold.
It is also brought to you by Sexed Vexed Perplexed Live! on WDLS Internet Radio. The Modern Whore Aylin Vega will be taking questions live Thursday night from 10 to 11. Tweet your questions beforehand @themodernwhore, or visit the Facebook event page at Facebook.com/SVPPodcast. Listen live Thursday night at www.WDLSradio.net.
Literally This Week is available on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Tune In, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: the BBC is helping Alzheimer’s patients remember, the World Wide Web turns 28, two new...March 11, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_11486294.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: a Professor has analyzed segregated libraries, the state of indie campus bookstores, how much did PRH pay the Obamas?, two awards are being investigated over their nominee lists, the UN wants a blogger freed, Wikipedia’s importance in libraries is on the rise, and Russia has banned a Norwegian journalist.. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by HIVE: Battle at the Dog Star by James D. King. Available soon in paperback from Lulu.com. Download it today wherever eBooks are sold.
It is also brought to you by Tales From the Old New Land, the monthly podcast series from A.C. Charlap, mixing Jewish culture, storytelling, and music for a cultural experience everyone can enjoy. Find Tales From the Old New Land on Podomatic, iTunes, Stitcher Radio, GooglePlay, Tune In, and media.aois21.com.
Literally This Week is available on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Tune In, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-03-12T21_26_42-07_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-03-12T21_26_42-07_00Mon, 13 Mar 2017 04:26:42 +00002017-11-072017-03-13https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-03-12T21_26_42-07_00
aois21 publishing1372noThis week: a Professor has analyzed segregated libraries, the state of indie campus bookstores, how much did PRH pay the Obamas?, two awards are being investigated over their nominee lists, the UN wants a blogger freed, Wikipedia’s importance in libraries is on the rise, and Russia has banned a Norwegian journalist.. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by HIVE: Battle at the Dog Star by James D. King. Available soon in paperback from Lulu.com. Download it today wherever eBooks are sold.
It is also brought to you by Tales From the Old New Land, the monthly podcast series from A.C. Charlap, mixing Jewish culture, storytelling, and music for a cultural experience everyone can enjoy. Find Tales From the Old New Land on Podomatic, iTunes, Stitcher Radio, GooglePlay, Tune In, and media.aois21.com.
Literally This Week is available on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Tune In, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: a Professor has analyzed segregated libraries, the state of indie campus bookstores, h...March 4, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_11486293.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: The Academy Awards were given out, Waterstones has upset some small town businesses, Belarus and Britain have a new library partnership, the Obamas have found their publisher, Amazon opens a bookstore in Massachusetts, BookGenie gives some interesting responses, and a look inside Russia’s propaganda warfare. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by Intimate Health Consulting, Happy, Sexy, Healthy. www.intimatehealthconsulting.org.
It is also sponsored by HIVE: Battle at the Dog Star by James D. King. Available soon in paperback from Lulu.com. Download it today wherever eBooks are sold.
Literally This Week is available on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Tune In, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-03-05T21_04_29-08_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-03-05T21_04_29-08_00Mon, 06 Mar 2017 05:04:29 +00002017-11-072017-03-06https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-03-05T21_04_29-08_00
aois21 publishing1304noThis week: The Academy Awards were given out, Waterstones has upset some small town businesses, Belarus and Britain have a new library partnership, the Obamas have found their publisher, Amazon opens a bookstore in Massachusetts, BookGenie gives some interesting responses, and a look inside Russia’s propaganda warfare. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by Intimate Health Consulting, Happy, Sexy, Healthy. www.intimatehealthconsulting.org.
It is also sponsored by HIVE: Battle at the Dog Star by James D. King. Available soon in paperback from Lulu.com. Download it today wherever eBooks are sold.
Literally This Week is available on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Tune In, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: The Academy Awards were given out, Waterstones has upset some small town businesses, B...February 25, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_11486294.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: Three Indie Publishers are going diverse in the UK, the former President is about to sign a book deal, Milo Yiannopoulos’ book deal is cancelled, Nashville’s library system is growing, Terry Pratchett is getting an exhibit of his work, Indonesia is banning a children’s sex ed book, and World Book Day is coming up next week. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by “Dating” as told by the Modern Whore by Aylin Vega. Dating is available as an eBook everywhere eBooks are sold, including market.aois21.com.
It is also sponsored by “Tales From the Old New Land,” a performing arts podcast by A.C. Charlap. This monthly story and music are a glimpse at Jewish live in Baltimore, built in the model of Prairie Home Companion. Find it each month on Podomatic, iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, and media.aois21.com
Literally This Week is available on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-02-26T21_41_00-08_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-02-26T21_41_00-08_00Mon, 27 Feb 2017 05:41:00 +00002017-11-072017-02-27https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-02-26T21_41_00-08_00
aois21 publishing1353noThis week: Three Indie Publishers are going diverse in the UK, the former President is about to sign a book deal, Milo Yiannopoulos’ book deal is cancelled, Nashville’s library system is growing, Terry Pratchett is getting an exhibit of his work, Indonesia is banning a children’s sex ed book, and World Book Day is coming up next week. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by “Dating” as told by the Modern Whore by Aylin Vega. Dating is available as an eBook everywhere eBooks are sold, including market.aois21.com.
It is also sponsored by “Tales From the Old New Land,” a performing arts podcast by A.C. Charlap. This monthly story and music are a glimpse at Jewish live in Baltimore, built in the model of Prairie Home Companion. Find it each month on Podomatic, iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, and media.aois21.com
Literally This Week is available on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, TuneIn, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: Three Indie Publishers are going diverse in the UK, the former President is about to s...February 11, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_11486294.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: 1984 has become a Broadway play, Publishers have set a milestone on Kickstarter, Celebrities are disrupting the children’s book industry, Shondaland has found its first comedy, a lifetime achievement award for someone who isn’t dead, Amazon seems to like print books now, and an illustrator has won a top prize. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by “Dating” as told by the Modern Whore by Aylin Vega. Dating is available as an eBook everywhere eBooks are sold, including market.aois21.com.
It is also sponsored by “Tales From the Old New Land,” a performing arts podcast by A.C. Charlap. This monthly story and music are a glimpse at Jewish live in Baltimore, built in the model of Prairie Home Companion. Find it each month on Podomatic, iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, and media.aois21.com
Literally This Week is available on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-02-12T20_27_21-08_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-02-12T20_27_21-08_00Mon, 13 Feb 2017 04:27:21 +00002017-11-072017-02-13https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-02-12T20_27_21-08_00
aois21 publishing1409noThis week: 1984 has become a Broadway play, Publishers have set a milestone on Kickstarter, Celebrities are disrupting the children’s book industry, Shondaland has found its first comedy, a lifetime achievement award for someone who isn’t dead, Amazon seems to like print books now, and an illustrator has won a top prize. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by “Dating” as told by the Modern Whore by Aylin Vega. Dating is available as an eBook everywhere eBooks are sold, including market.aois21.com.
It is also sponsored by “Tales From the Old New Land,” a performing arts podcast by A.C. Charlap. This monthly story and music are a glimpse at Jewish live in Baltimore, built in the model of Prairie Home Companion. Find it each month on Podomatic, iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, and media.aois21.com
Literally This Week is available on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: 1984 has become a Broadway play, Publishers have set a milestone on Kickstarter, Celeb...February 4, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_11486294.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: The National Magazine Awards left a genre out, the New York Times is banking on podcasts, PEN/America is answering back to President Trump, as are a number of indie publishers, membership is booming at The Guardian, Kim Kardashian is starting a book club, and George R. R. Martin has finished writing something. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by It’s Not Even Past: A History of the Distant Present, the newest podcast series from aois21. Hosted by Evan Tucker, it will a deep dive into the history behind the breaking stories. Find It’s Not Even Past on Podomatic, iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, and media.aois21.com.
It is also brought to you by “Dating” as told by the Modern Whore by Aylin Vega. Dating is available as an eBook everywhere eBooks are sold, including market.aois21.com.
Literally This Week is available on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-02-05T21_29_30-08_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-02-05T21_29_30-08_00Mon, 06 Feb 2017 05:29:30 +00002017-11-072017-02-06https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-02-05T21_29_30-08_00
aois21 publishing1350noThis week: The National Magazine Awards left a genre out, the New York Times is banking on podcasts, PEN/America is answering back to President Trump, as are a number of indie publishers, membership is booming at The Guardian, Kim Kardashian is starting a book club, and George R. R. Martin has finished writing something. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by It’s Not Even Past: A History of the Distant Present, the newest podcast series from aois21. Hosted by Evan Tucker, it will a deep dive into the history behind the breaking stories. Find It’s Not Even Past on Podomatic, iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, and media.aois21.com.
It is also brought to you by “Dating” as told by the Modern Whore by Aylin Vega. Dating is available as an eBook everywhere eBooks are sold, including market.aois21.com.
Literally This Week is available on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: The National Magazine Awards left a genre out, the New York Times is banking on podcas...January 28, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_11486294.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: There’s a new way to listen to Audiobooks, there’s a Shakespeare crowdsource project, Amazon has changed it international deals, U.S. Government agencies have been blocked from communicating, 1984 and other titles are seeing renewed interest, a German media company is betting big on print, and publishers are mad at the New York Times. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by HIVE: First Contact by James D. King, the first book in the HIVE sci-fi series. Find it as an eBook everywhere eBooks are sold including market.aois21.com. Find it print exclusively on Lulu.com.
It is also brought to you by “Dating” as told by the Modern Whore by Aylin Vega. Dating is available as an eBook everywhere eBooks are sold, including market.aois21.com.
Literally This Week is available on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-01-29T20_04_10-08_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-01-29T20_04_10-08_00Mon, 30 Jan 2017 04:04:10 +00002017-11-072017-01-30https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-01-29T20_04_10-08_00
aois21 publishing1295noThis week: There’s a new way to listen to Audiobooks, there’s a Shakespeare crowdsource project, Amazon has changed it international deals, U.S. Government agencies have been blocked from communicating, 1984 and other titles are seeing renewed interest, a German media company is betting big on print, and publishers are mad at the New York Times. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by HIVE: First Contact by James D. King, the first book in the HIVE sci-fi series. Find it as an eBook everywhere eBooks are sold including market.aois21.com. Find it print exclusively on Lulu.com.
It is also brought to you by “Dating” as told by the Modern Whore by Aylin Vega. Dating is available as an eBook everywhere eBooks are sold, including market.aois21.com.
Literally This Week is available on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: There’s a new way to listen to Audiobooks, there’s a Shakespeare crowdsource project, ...January 21, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_11486294.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: Prince Charles writes a book on climate changes, President Obama cannot live without books, the National Book Critics Circle announce finalists, is the Alt-Right taking over publishing?, PEN America announces nominees, a library book was extremely overdue in San Francisco, and eBook publishers have reached a new agreement in Canada. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by the Indiegogo campaign for The Will of the Magi by Paul Dickinson Russell. Ending on Saturday, we are raising money to edit, design, and print Russell’s fantasy epic. Visit indiegogo.com and show your support.
It is also brought to you by Sexed Vexed Perplexed Live! On Thursday night from 10 to 11 pm ET, Aylin Vega will be taking questions and giving out advice live on WDLS Internet Radio. Tweet your questions to @themodernwhore or leave them on the Facebook events page and Aylin will answer them live. Visit WDLSRadio.net to listen live and call in!
Literally This Week is available on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-01-22T10_25_03-08_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-01-22T10_25_03-08_00Sun, 22 Jan 2017 18:25:03 +00002017-11-072017-01-22https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-01-22T10_25_03-08_00
aois21 publishing1345noThis week: Prince Charles writes a book on climate changes, President Obama cannot live without books, the National Book Critics Circle announce finalists, is the Alt-Right taking over publishing?, PEN America announces nominees, a library book was extremely overdue in San Francisco, and eBook publishers have reached a new agreement in Canada. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by the Indiegogo campaign for The Will of the Magi by Paul Dickinson Russell. Ending on Saturday, we are raising money to edit, design, and print Russell’s fantasy epic. Visit indiegogo.com and show your support.
It is also brought to you by Sexed Vexed Perplexed Live! On Thursday night from 10 to 11 pm ET, Aylin Vega will be taking questions and giving out advice live on WDLS Internet Radio. Tweet your questions to @themodernwhore or leave them on the Facebook events page and Aylin will answer them live. Visit WDLSRadio.net to listen live and call in!
Literally This Week is available on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: Prince Charles writes a book on climate changes, President Obama cannot live without b...January 7, 2017<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_11486294.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: a current Sherlock is related to Sherlock’s creator, Indies finished the year strong, Kobo is expanding in Europe, AllRomance.com is no more, Medium has quit the ads biz, there’s a new award for writers of color, and World Book Day has launched a new competition for kids. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by the Indiegogo campaign for The Will of the Magi by Paul Dickinson Russell. Running now through January 21st, we are raising money to edit, design, and print Russell’s fantasy epic. Visit indiegogo.com and show your support.
It is also brought to you by Tales From the Old New Land, the newest podcast series from the aois21 podcast network. This series by A.C. Charlap includes storytelling, interviews, music and humor in a unique view of Jewish Culture in Baltimore. Find it monthly on Podomatic, iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, and media.aois21.com.
Literally This Week is available on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-01-07T23_33_36-08_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-01-07T23_33_36-08_00Sun, 08 Jan 2017 07:33:36 +00002017-11-072017-01-08https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-01-07T23_33_36-08_00
aois21 publishing1345noThis week: a current Sherlock is related to Sherlock’s creator, Indies finished the year strong, Kobo is expanding in Europe, AllRomance.com is no more, Medium has quit the ads biz, there’s a new award for writers of color, and World Book Day has launched a new competition for kids. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by the Indiegogo campaign for The Will of the Magi by Paul Dickinson Russell. Running now through January 21st, we are raising money to edit, design, and print Russell’s fantasy epic. Visit indiegogo.com and show your support.
It is also brought to you by Tales From the Old New Land, the newest podcast series from the aois21 podcast network. This series by A.C. Charlap includes storytelling, interviews, music and humor in a unique view of Jewish Culture in Baltimore. Find it monthly on Podomatic, iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, and media.aois21.com.
Literally This Week is available on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: a current Sherlock is related to Sherlock’s creator, Indies finished the year strong, ...December 31, 2016<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_11486294.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: J.K. Rowling shares a Christmas message on Twitter, Kafka’s letters are now in the National Library of Israel, a church used the wrong words to the Hail Mary, George R.R. Martin think there’s been too much death in 2016, Remembering Carrie Fisher, the author, a publisher is under fire for a new book deal, and all of the end of the year book lists combined. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by the Indiegogo campaign for The Will of the Magi by Paul Dickinson Russell. Running now through January 21st, we are raising money to edit, design, and print Russell’s fantasy epic. Visit indiegogo.com and show your support.
It is also brought to you by Nos Populus by Ian Roberts. The political thriller is available in print from CreateSpace and as an eBook everywhere, including the aois21 market and Amazon.
Literally This Week is available on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2017-01-01T21_59_31-08_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-01-01T21_59_31-08_00Mon, 02 Jan 2017 05:59:31 +00002017-11-072017-01-02https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2017-01-01T21_59_31-08_00
aois21 publishing1220noThis week: J.K. Rowling shares a Christmas message on Twitter, Kafka’s letters are now in the National Library of Israel, a church used the wrong words to the Hail Mary, George R.R. Martin think there’s been too much death in 2016, Remembering Carrie Fisher, the author, a publisher is under fire for a new book deal, and all of the end of the year book lists combined. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by the Indiegogo campaign for The Will of the Magi by Paul Dickinson Russell. Running now through January 21st, we are raising money to edit, design, and print Russell’s fantasy epic. Visit indiegogo.com and show your support.
It is also brought to you by Nos Populus by Ian Roberts. The political thriller is available in print from CreateSpace and as an eBook everywhere, including the aois21 market and Amazon.
Literally This Week is available on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: J.K. Rowling shares a Christmas message on Twitter, Kafka’s letters are now in the Nat...December 25, 2016<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_11486294.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: Vanity Fair has gotten a boost thanks to an unlikely source, Penguin Random House deals with union fallout, Indie Publishers review the year, Pantsuited Nation gets a book deal. but some of its members are unhappy, and J.K. Rowling is writing two more novels. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by the Indiegogo campaign for The Will of the Magi by Paul Dickinson Russell. Running now through January 21st, we are raising money to edit, design, and print Russell’s fantasy epic. Visit indiegogo.com and show your support.
It is also brought to you by the #GiveABook promotion from the aois21 market. Visit the market between now and Dec. 31st and save 16% on any purchase of $5 or more. Go to market.aois21.com and #GiveABook this holiday season.
Literally This Week is available on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2016-12-25T20_53_04-08_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2016-12-25T20_53_04-08_00Mon, 26 Dec 2016 04:53:04 +00002017-11-072016-12-26https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2016-12-25T20_53_04-08_00
aois21 publishing1380noThis week: Vanity Fair has gotten a boost thanks to an unlikely source, Penguin Random House deals with union fallout, Indie Publishers review the year, Pantsuited Nation gets a book deal. but some of its members are unhappy, and J.K. Rowling is writing two more novels. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by the Indiegogo campaign for The Will of the Magi by Paul Dickinson Russell. Running now through January 21st, we are raising money to edit, design, and print Russell’s fantasy epic. Visit indiegogo.com and show your support.
It is also brought to you by the #GiveABook promotion from the aois21 market. Visit the market between now and Dec. 31st and save 16% on any purchase of $5 or more. Go to market.aois21.com and #GiveABook this holiday season.
Literally This Week is available on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: Vanity Fair has gotten a boost thanks to an unlikely source, Penguin Random House deal...December 18, 2016<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_11486294.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: U.S. libraries are dealing with hate speech, Bob Dylan is sorry he didn’t go to Sweden, the Golden Globe nominations are out, UK Libraries are cutting back, the winner of France’s highest literary honor has some harsh things to say about France’s leadership, the most expensive science book sets a new record at auction, and American Publishers have sent a letter to President-Elect Trump. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by the Indiegogo campaign for The Will of the Magi by Paul Dickinson Russell. Running now through January 21st, we are raising money to edit, design, and print Russell’s fantasy epic. Visit indiegogo.com and show your support.
It is also brought to you “Dating” as told by the Modern Whore, a memoir of sexuality and relationships by Aylin Vega. Sometimes funny, always risqué, pick up this guide to dating in the 21st century from the aois21 market, and everywhere eBooks are sold.
Literally This Week is available on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2016-12-18T22_41_22-08_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2016-12-18T22_41_22-08_00Mon, 19 Dec 2016 06:41:22 +00002017-11-072016-12-19https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2016-12-18T22_41_22-08_00
aois21 publishing1401noThis week: U.S. libraries are dealing with hate speech, Bob Dylan is sorry he didn’t go to Sweden, the Golden Globe nominations are out, UK Libraries are cutting back, the winner of France’s highest literary honor has some harsh things to say about France’s leadership, the most expensive science book sets a new record at auction, and American Publishers have sent a letter to President-Elect Trump. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by the Indiegogo campaign for The Will of the Magi by Paul Dickinson Russell. Running now through January 21st, we are raising money to edit, design, and print Russell’s fantasy epic. Visit indiegogo.com and show your support.
It is also brought to you “Dating” as told by the Modern Whore, a memoir of sexuality and relationships by Aylin Vega. Sometimes funny, always risqué, pick up this guide to dating in the 21st century from the aois21 market, and everywhere eBooks are sold.
Literally This Week is available on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: U.S. libraries are dealing with hate speech, Bob Dylan is sorry he didn’t go to Sweden...December 4, 2016<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_11486294.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: Anne Rice is bringing her vampire novels to TV, the Oxford Lit Fest has bowed to pressure, a DC Indie Bookstore is expanding, the Bad Sex in Fiction award was handed out, Bob Dylan is skipping Sweden, Small Business Saturday was good for Indie bookstores, and the Columbus Public Library is marking a change. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by the Indiegogo campaign for The Will of the Magi by Paul Dickinson Russell. Running now through January 21st, we are raising money to edit, design, and print Russell’s fantasy epic. Visit indiegogo.com and show your support.
It is also brought to you be aois21’s newest podcast series, Tales From the Old New Land, an exploration of Jewish culture in the U.S. in the mold of Prairie Home Companion. Available on the second Saturday of each month on Podomatic, iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, and media.aois21.com.
Literally This Week is available on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2016-12-04T21_56_32-08_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2016-12-04T21_56_32-08_00Mon, 05 Dec 2016 05:56:32 +00002017-11-072016-12-05https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2016-12-04T21_56_32-08_00
aois21 publishing1673noThis week: Anne Rice is bringing her vampire novels to TV, the Oxford Lit Fest has bowed to pressure, a DC Indie Bookstore is expanding, the Bad Sex in Fiction award was handed out, Bob Dylan is skipping Sweden, Small Business Saturday was good for Indie bookstores, and the Columbus Public Library is marking a change. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by the Indiegogo campaign for The Will of the Magi by Paul Dickinson Russell. Running now through January 21st, we are raising money to edit, design, and print Russell’s fantasy epic. Visit indiegogo.com and show your support.
It is also brought to you be aois21’s newest podcast series, Tales From the Old New Land, an exploration of Jewish culture in the U.S. in the mold of Prairie Home Companion. Available on the second Saturday of each month on Podomatic, iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, and media.aois21.com.
Literally This Week is available on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
You can now support this podcast either by buying an ad through Advertisecast, or on the aois21 page on Patreon.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.This week: Anne Rice is bringing her vampire novels to TV, the Oxford Lit Fest has bowed to press...August 7, 2016<img src="http://assets.podomatic.net/ts/d8/bf/eb/pub93465/1400x1400_11486294.jpg" alt="itunes pic" /><br />This week: The new Harry Potter script book is setting records, but it’s disappointing fans, Patton Oswalt is completing his wife’s work, one lucky unpublished author may be going to the UK’s Festival of Writing, bookstores in Moscow have a problem with the new Harry Potter for a different reason, do you live longer if you read more?, and a Patrick Ness YA series is coming to theatres. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by The Empty Spaces by Bianca Palmisano, available for free with a special discount code from aois21 publishing.
Available on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
If there’s a story we missed, tweet to us with the #literallythisweek and we’ll check it out.http://pub93465.podomatic.com/entry/2016-08-07T20_51_29-07_00https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2016-08-07T20_51_29-07_00Mon, 08 Aug 2016 03:51:29 +00002017-03-052016-08-08https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/pub93465/episodes/2016-08-07T20_51_29-07_00
aois21 publishingpublishing,books,libraries,writing,reading,harry,potter,poetry1301cleanThis week: The new Harry Potter script book is setting records, but it’s disappointing fans, Patton Oswalt is completing his wife’s work, one lucky unpublished author may be going to the UK’s Festival of Writing, bookstores in Moscow have a problem with the new Harry Potter for a different reason, do you live longer if you read more?, and a Patrick Ness YA series is coming to theatres. All this, plus the New York Times Bestsellers, Literally This Week.
This episode is sponsored by The Empty Spaces by Bianca Palmisano, available for free with a special discount code from aois21 publishing.
Available on iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, Podomatic, and media.aois21.com.
For news during the week, follow @aois21 on Twitter.
If there’s a story we m